Unfortunately the 12 people named for the ‘Council’ include 6 civil servants (about 10% of the public service), only one local government person (about 25%), a couple from the health service people (also about 25%) and some voluntary sector people – a small fraction of ‘public’ activity.

“If we want Whitehall to focus on innovation, we have to change the signals we give at the top – and the support we give policymakers at the bottom. And crucially we have to showcase the kind of innovation we want to see, in a way that keeps the ‘flash-to-bang’ as fast as possible” says Byrne.

I can’t help thinking something dominated by Whitehall insiders might not be the best way of achieving this.